Asteroid Explorer Hayabusa2 is on a mission to explore the origins of the solar system by studying the makeup of asteroid 1999 JU3. It is expected to reach the asteroid in 2018 and return to Earth with samples in 2020.

The probe will orbit the asteroid at a distance of about 20 km and carry out remote sensing observations while sending down three landers for direct measurements of the asteroid surface.

An artist’s rendering of Asteroid Explorer Hayabusa2 above asteroid 1999 JU3. Courtesy of JAXA.
From orbit Hayabusa2 will assess the asteroid with two IR systems. The NIRS3 spectrometer will investigate mineral and water signatures, while the TIR thermal imager will study the temperature and thermal inertia of the asteroid.

One of the landers, MASCOT (Mobile Asteroid Surface Scout), incorporates a hyperspectral microscope for determining the composition of materials on the asteroid surface. Called MicrOmega, it will image the asteroid surface over 365 spectral bandwidths from 0.95 to 3.65 µm.